Vieras are nice. Perhaps your panel is doing frame rate interpolation, where it upconverts low frame rate source material to high frame rate for display. This is something panels which can operate at higher refresh rates offer (100 Hz, 120 Hz, 200 Hz etc).

This is also something I immediately turn off if I'm ever setting up a screen, because it makes everything look like a soap opera and annoys me after a while (unless it's true high frame rate source material, like The Hobbit HFR).

Check in your options for something like 'True Motion', 'Cinema Smoother', Motion Estimation / Motion Compensation... And turn it off. Manufacturers call it various nonsense marketing names including 'Truemotion Plus', 'Auto Motion Plus', 'ClearFrame' etc. Essentially it's pulldown, and it's not the original picture, and I don't like it. ;)

Often the chipset doesn't get it quite right, or it gets confused with picture content, and you can end up with the option smoothing suddenly stopping - or kicking in - midway through a camera pan or actor moving slowly in a scene, which is incredibly jarring.

Also (depending on your panel options) set local dimming off, turn brightness down to about halfway, turn contrast to about 3/4 and set your colour balance or screen temperature to 'warm' or 'warm 1' (usually much closer to the calibrated D65 reference white used in broadcast). Almost every TV I've ever seen is FAR too blue out of the box on its defaults. Set Sharpness to as low as possible, on almost all screens this is ADDITIONAL sharpness and makes everything look foul. Your eyes will thank you!

Cheers
Chris


On 30 April 2016 2:23:40 p.m. "Simon Morgan" <[email protected]> wrote:

Thanks for your helpful explanation. Demystified a few points for me. I have
a new Panasonic Viera (is this "high end"?) and I find the 25fps from my GiP
downloads more than adequate - perhaps because I know no better!
RGds
Simon Morgan

-----Original Message-----
From: get_iplayer [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Christopher Woods
Sent: 29 April 2016 20:42
To: Dave Lambley; Dave Liquorice
Cc: Get_iplayer List
Subject: Re: How good is HD supposed to be?

"Upscaling" is a misnomer in this context. That implies a change of picture
resolution, when there's no resizing going on. What iPlayer does for the 50p
streams is double frame rate deinterlacing, using what looks like a bob
deinterlace technique.

If you watch content originated in 25i, you will (once the stream steps up
to 720p50) see the deinterlaced 50p content and you'll notice immediately
how fluidic motion is - "just like TV", because that's exactly what CRTs
used to do.

25 interlaced frames per second yields 50 interlaced fields per second (due
to odd and even line scanning), with the resultant persistence of vision
effect inducing a pseudo 50 frames per second on viewing as each field's
worth of capture by the camera sensor 'sees' a slightly different point in
time. This renders as smoother motion, with a slight loss of sharpness due
to the low overall temporal resolution, but as it overall appears more
lifelike the eye prefers it.

25psf (progressive segmented frames) is the "filmic" look, where there's
only 25 distinct 'captures' of motion per second; the video simply
'transported' as interlaced. Each field 'sees' its half of the same source
frame. When decoded properly, you get 100% progressive output. However as
this gives you half the temporal resolution, motion is visibly less fluid.

Modern flat panels all deinterlace all interlaced source material to display
a progressive image, but only the higher end panels do quality deinterlacing
(Yadif or similar) Cheaper screens will usually bob deinterlace
(computationally less demanding) and porbably convert to 60p as their panels
and processing will be running internally at 60Hz.

You can even spot some cheap screens doing this as they'll add or duplicate
frames periodically to equal 60 fps from 50 fps source material, or they'll
do weird interpolation which can result in jumpy credits or news ticker
scrolling artifacts.

For an example of 720p50 iPlayer content, watch any episode of EastEnders
(be sure to enable HD), full screen it and wait for the bandwidth to step up
to max - you'll need 5 megabits per second minimum to stream (... Or just dl
it with gip).

For an example of progressive scan material, just about any documentary
(e.g. Horizon) or episode of Click will do. The latest Horizon about dating
is 25 PsF: you can see the deinterlacing 'interline twitter' on high
contrast edges during the programme - an example being the leaves of the pot
plant moving on the windowsill at around 22 minute mark.


On 29 April 2016 12:44:31 p.m. Dave Lambley <[email protected]> wrote:

On 29 April 2016 at 00:57, Dave Liquorice <[email protected]> wrote:
On Thu, 28 Apr 2016 07:07:33 -0500, artisticforge . wrote:


NB hvfhd DOES NOT OFFER HIGHER RESOLUTION (CLARITY), only doubled
framerate (25FPS x2), which results in smoother scenes where
motion is involved!

How does repeating frames improve smoothness of movement? Or does
this encode upscale each field(*) and encode that to increase the
temporal resolution?

It is the frames per second that provide the human eye with the
persistence of vision, the illusion of motion.

I could show you 100 fps but if there where only 4 different images
displayed the illusion of motion would be no smoother than 25 fps.
You only get smoother movement by increasing the number of different
images displayed.

So if this hvfhd only repeats each frame to get a higher frame there
is no increase in smoothness. How ever if they take each field,
upscale it and encode as a frame that would inrease the smoothness.

I believe the frame repeating idea is a red herring. Real 50 frame/s
computer video is a thing which exists. If your browser's up to it you
can see for yourself here, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PmNapQdWFKg

You'll need to choose one of the "p50" resolutions on the Quality menu.

Dave

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